Dimensional Tolerance · ISO 3759 · ISO 139 · AQL Inspection

Dimensional Tolerance Guide for Finished Scarves — ISO 3759 Measurement Protocol & Industry Tolerance Standards

Technical reference covering size tolerance norms for length, width, GSM and fringe, the ISO 139 conditioning protocol, post-wash measurement requirements, and integration with AQL pre-shipment inspection for scarf procurement.

Data verified as of April 2026 — ISO 3759:2011, ISO 139:2005/AMD 1:2011, ASTM D3774-96, ISO 3801:1977

±3%Length Tol. — Standard Retail
±2%Width Tol. — Standard Retail
≥4 hISO 139 Conditioning Time
20±2°C65±4% RH — Test Atmosphere
±5–8%GSM Tolerance — Woven / Knit

Key Takeaways

What Scarf Buyers Need to Know About Dimensional Tolerance

  • No international standard mandates a specific size tolerance for finished scarves — all figures are commercially negotiated between buyer and supplier and must be stated in writing in the tech pack.
  • Industry consensus: ±3% on length and ±2% on width for standard retail; luxury and private-label programmes tighten to ±2% on both dimensions, with a corresponding cost impact on loom settings and finishing control.
  • All dimensions must be measured after the care-label wash cycle per ISO 6330 or AATCC 135 — never on greige or pre-finished fabric. Pre-wash dimensions are commercially meaningless because shrinkage alters the finished size.
  • Samples must condition for a minimum of 4 hours at ISO 139 atmosphere (20 ± 2°C, 65 ± 4% RH) before measurement. Wet or unconditioned measurement systematically overstates or understates width depending on moisture content at the time.
  • Dimensional tolerance and shrinkage specifications must be reconciled on the same target dimension — setting them independently creates a gap where a piece that just passes shrinkage testing simultaneously fails the size tolerance check.

What Dimensional Tolerance Specifications Cover

Dimensional tolerance defines the permissible deviation between the specified target dimension and the actual measured dimension of a finished, washed, and conditioned scarf. It is not a test standard in the sense of ISO 12945 or ISO 13938 — there is no ISO document that prescribes what tolerance values must be. Instead, tolerance is a commercial specification agreed between buyer and factory and enforced through AQL pre-shipment inspection.

The dimensions covered are typically: finished length (warp direction for woven, course direction for knitted), finished width (weft/wale direction), fabric weight per unit area (GSM), and — where applicable — fringe length and fringe strand count. Each dimension has its own tolerance because the factors that control length, width, and weight are largely independent: loom tension and take-up rate determine warp length; reed width and weft yarn setting determine weft width; yarn count, twist, and picks per cm jointly determine GSM.

The measurement standard that governs how dimensions are marked, measured, and reported is ISO 3759:2011, which specifies how to mark specimens before washing and how to measure after. The atmospheric conditions under which measurement must be performed are governed by ISO 139:2005. Both must be referenced in a complete dimensional tolerance specification — stating a tolerance without specifying measurement conditions allows wide inter-laboratory variation that makes the specification unenforceable.

Standard Scope and Measurement Protocol

Three standards jointly govern dimensional measurement for finished scarves. All three must be referenced together for a complete specification.

Standard Scope Applies To Key Requirement
ISO 3759:2011 Preparation, marking and measuring of fabric specimens and garments in tests for dimensional change All woven and knitted textiles Mark measurement points before washing; measure at same marked positions after washing and conditioning
ISO 139:2005 / AMD 1:2011 Standard atmosphere for conditioning and testing textiles All textile test measurements 20 ± 2°C; 65 ± 4% relative humidity; minimum conditioning time 4 hours before measurement
ASTM D3774-96 (reapproved 2018) Width measurement of textile fabric Woven and knitted fabrics Steel rule measurement; fabric laid flat on smooth horizontal surface; measured to nearest millimetre
ISO 3801:1977 Woven fabrics — determination of mass per unit area Woven scarves Three 100 cm² circular specimens, conditioned, weighed to 0.01 g precision
ISO 4604:1997 Weft knitted fabrics — determination of mass per unit area Knitted scarves Relaxed specimen — knit must lay flat ≥24 hours before cutting; stretched cutting gives artificially low GSM

Five-Step Measurement Protocol

Step 01

Mark the Sample

Mark three measurement positions per dimension on a minimum of five pieces per colour before any washing. Use permanent marker or thread tack at positions per ISO 3759.

ISO 3759:2011
Step 02

Perform Care Wash

Wash using the care-label programme per ISO 6330 or AATCC 135. Complete the full drying step. Wet dimensions are not valid measurements.

ISO 6330 / AATCC 135
Step 03

Condition the Sample

Lay dried sample flat — no pins, no weights — in standard atmosphere for ≥4 hours. Sample must not be folded or stacked during conditioning.

ISO 139:2005 — 20±2°C / 65±4% RH
Step 04

Measure Flat

Lay sample on smooth horizontal surface. Measure at three marked positions. For width, use calibrated steel rule per ASTM D3774. Record to nearest millimetre.

ASTM D3774-96
Step 05

Record and Compare

Calculate the mean of three readings per dimension. Compare to target ± agreed tolerance. Record per-piece result as Pass / Fail for the AQL inspection report.

AQL 2.5 — Major Defect

Industry Tolerance Norms by Programme Grade

All figures apply to post-wash, conditioned dimensions measured at ISO 139 standard atmosphere. These are industry consensus values, not ISO mandates — confirm with your buyer before production.

Parameter Standard Retail Premium / Wholesale Luxury / Private Label AQL Classification
Length tolerance ±3% ±2.5% ±2% Major defect if outside
Width tolerance ±2% ±2% ±1.5% Major defect if outside
GSM — woven ±5% ±5% ±3% Major defect if outside
GSM — knitted ±8% ±5% ±5% Major defect if outside
Fringe length ±10% or ±5 mm (stricter applies) ±8% or ±3 mm ±5% or ±2 mm Minor or Major per grade
Fringe strand count ±2 strands per end ±1 strand per end Exact — zero deviation Major defect if outside
Measurement state Post-wash, conditioned ≥4 h at ISO 139 — all grades without exception

Why Tolerance and Shrinkage Must Be Reconciled Together

Conflict Scenario — Produces Hidden Failures

Unreconciled Specification

Target length: 180 cm. Shrinkage allowance: ≤4%. Length tolerance: ±2%. Set independently.

Greige cut = 180 ÷ (1 − 0.04) = 187.5 cm
Piece shrinks 4% → finished 180.0 cm ✓ (shrinkage passes)
Tolerance lower bound = 180 × 0.98 = 176.4 cm

Piece cut at 185 cm, shrinks 4.3%:
185 × 0.957 = 177.0 cm
Shrinkage: 4.3% ≤ 4%? → NO → already a FAIL
Even at 4.0%: 185 × 0.96 = 177.6 cm < 176.4? → YES → size PASS
But narrow-end cut piece fails both simultaneously.
Aligned Specification — Both Limits Pass Together

Reconciled Specification

Map both shrinkage limit and tolerance against the same 180 cm target. Use ±3% tolerance and ≤3% shrinkage for standard retail.

Target: 180 cm. Tol: ±3%. Shrinkage: ≤3%.
Greige cut = 180 ÷ 0.97 = 185.6 cm

Worst case (shrinks 3%, cut at tolerance min):
185.6 × 0.97 = 180.0 → 180.0 × 0.97 = 174.6 cm
Tolerance lower bound = 180 × 0.97 = 174.6 cm ✓

Both specifications pass simultaneously at extremes.

Factory Application

Dimensional tolerance control begins at the cutting stage, not at final inspection. For woven scarves, the greige cut length must account for anticipated warp shrinkage after washing and finishing — this requires a reliable shrinkage coefficient derived from in-house testing of the actual yarn lot, not carried forward from a prior lot. Loom output tension, finishing bath temperature, and drying conditions all contribute to the settled dimension. A factory that controls these through documented process parameters will achieve consistent tolerance performance; one that relies on post-wash size correction will generate chronic borderline non-conformance that compounds through a production run.

For knitted scarves, the equivalent control variable is take-down tension and course density. A change in knitting tension that shifts GSM outside specification will simultaneously shift the finished dimensions, because weight, width, and length are structurally interdependent in a knit. This means GSM checks and dimensional checks must be performed together during inline quality control — a piece that passes each individual test can still indicate a process drift that will worsen as the run continues. Knitted GSM specimens must be cut from fully relaxed fabric after a minimum 24-hour rest period, not from tensioned fabric straight off the machine.

Fringe tolerance is frequently the dimension that triggers final inspection failures, yet it is the most controllable variable at the factory stage. Hand-twisted fringe has inherent natural variation; machine-twisted or length-cut fringe can be held to ±2 mm repeatability. If a luxury buyer specifies ±2 mm fringe tolerance, this implies machine processing — hand-knotted fringe was never compatible with that specification, and the incompatibility should be raised at the quotation stage, not discovered at inspection.

Common Misunderstanding

“The scarf passed the factory size check, so it will pass the buyer’s inspection.”

Technical Reality

Factory size checks and third-party inspection measurements are only comparable when performed under identical conditions: same wash cycle, same conditioning time, same atmosphere, and the same measurement method. A factory that measures width immediately after tumble drying will record a dimension 1–3% narrower than the same scarf measured after 4-hour conditioning at 65% RH — for a 30 cm scarf, this is up to 9 mm of apparent difference that is entirely attributable to measurement protocol, not fabric variation. Similarly, a factory that measures pre-wash greige dimensions and applies an internal shrinkage coefficient to estimate finished size is running a calculation, not a measurement — if the coefficient was derived from a different yarn lot or season, the prediction will diverge from the actual. Agree in writing that both factory QC and inspection must measure post-wash, conditioned specimens using the same reference atmosphere. Include this in the measurement instruction section of your tech pack, not just in the general quality clauses.

Related Technical Parameters

Dimensional Stability (Shrinkage)

Shrinkage testing (ISO 6330) quantifies how much a fabric changes after washing. Shrinkage and dimensional tolerance specifications operate on the same finished dimension — both must be set and reconciled together in the same tech pack.

Fabric Weight (GSM)

GSM is conditioned and measured under the same ISO 139 protocol as dimensional tolerance. Variation outside ±5% typically signals a process parameter shift — the same shift will also affect finished length and width.

Stitch Density (Knitted Scarves)

For knitted scarves, courses per cm and wales per cm determine both GSM and finished width simultaneously. Stitch density specification is the upstream production variable that controls both parameters together.

AQL Inspection Level

Dimensional non-conformance is classified as a Major defect under AQL 2.5. The inspection checklist must explicitly list each agreed tolerance parameter — length, width, GSM, fringe — to enforce them at pre-shipment inspection.

Care Label Accuracy

Post-wash dimensions must be measured after the care-label wash cycle. If care instructions differ between markets, each wash programme produces a different post-wash dimension — specify which cycle governs the tolerance check.

Finishing Conditions

Stenter width, compaction settings, and calendering tension all affect finished dimensions. Any change to finishing parameters invalidates previously established shrinkage coefficients and requires fresh dimensional verification before bulk production continues.

When to Specify Dimensional Tolerance

Always Specify When

  • Issuing a tech pack for any custom-sized scarf programme
  • Sourcing from a new factory without established size history with your product
  • Switching yarn suppliers, counts, or fibre blends within a running programme
  • Producing scarves with stated dimensions on retail hang tags or packaging
  • Entering a market with size-labelling regulations (EU, US, Japan)
  • Running luxury or private-label orders where returns are brand-critical
  • Re-orders from prior seasons — always re-confirm post-wash dimensions; shrinkage coefficients shift with yarn lot changes

Common Omissions to Avoid

  • Specifying greige dimensions only without a post-wash target dimension
  • Setting a tolerance without naming the wash cycle used for measurement
  • Agreeing tolerances verbally that are not reflected in the AQL inspection checklist
  • Applying woven-scarf tolerance norms to knitted fabrics without adjustment for knit relaxation behaviour
  • Specifying fringe length at knitting machine output — fringe extends during washing and finishing
  • Omitting fringe strand count from the tolerance specification and checking only fringe length

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the standard size tolerance for a finished scarf?

There is no ISO mandate. Industry consensus is ±3% on length and ±2% on width for standard retail; luxury grades tighten to ±2% on both dimensions. All tolerances must be agreed in writing before production starts.

Should scarf dimensions be measured before or after washing?

Always after the care-label wash cycle per ISO 6330 or AATCC 135. Pre-wash greige dimensions are commercially irrelevant because relaxation and felting shrinkage alter the finished size.

How long must samples condition before measurement?

A minimum of 4 hours at ISO 139 standard atmosphere: 20 ± 2°C and 65 ± 4% relative humidity. Measuring before conditioning systematically misrepresents width in hygroscopic fibres such as wool and cotton.

Can I specify the same tolerance for length and width?

You can, but warp and weft behave differently under loom tension and in washing. Specifying ±2% on both for a woven scarf is achievable but requires tighter process control — factor this into cost when quoting.

How does dimensional tolerance interact with shrinkage specification?

Tolerance and shrinkage limits both apply to the same finished dimension but are usually set by different people at different stages of tech pack development — the result is often two specifications that conflict at their extreme limits. A piece can pass shrinkage testing (e.g. 3.8% shrinkage within a 4% allowance) and simultaneously fail the dimensional tolerance check if the cut piece started at the narrow end of allowable cutting variation. The solution is to map both limits against the same numerical target before issuing the tech pack, verify compatibility using the arithmetic shown in this guide, and include both the shrinkage limit and the dimensional tolerance in the same section of the inspection checklist so the AQL inspector treats them as connected requirements rather than independent pass/fail criteria.

Standards & References

  • ISO 3759:2011 — Textiles: Preparation, marking and measuring of fabric specimens and garments in tests for determination of dimensional change
  • ISO 139:2005 / AMD 1:2011 — Textiles: Standard atmospheres for conditioning and testing (20 ± 2°C; 65 ± 4% RH; minimum 4 h conditioning)
  • ASTM D3774-96 (reapproved 2018) — Standard Test Method for Width of Textile Fabric; published by ASTM International
  • ISO 3801:1977 — Textiles — Woven fabrics: Determination of mass per unit length and mass per unit area
  • ISO 4604:1997 — Textiles — Weft knitted fabrics: Determination of mass per unit area (relaxed specimen method)
  • ISO 6330:2012 — Textiles: Domestic washing and drying procedures for textile testing
  • AATCC 135:2018 — Dimensional Changes of Fabrics After Home Laundering; published by the American Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists (AATCC)
  • ISO 2859-1:1999 — Sampling procedures for inspection by attributes — AQL tables for pre-shipment inspection
  • Dimensional measurement and AQL inspection services are available from accredited third-party agencies. SGS offers pre-shipment inspection with dimensional verification to tech-pack specifications; confirm that the inspection checklist explicitly includes all agreed tolerance parameters — length, width, GSM, and fringe.